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  • If a Token No Longer Depends on Issuer Efforts, the SEC-CFTC 2026 Crypto Framework Treats It Differently
  • Regulation

If a Token No Longer Depends on Issuer Efforts, the SEC-CFTC 2026 Crypto Framework Treats It Differently

admin 3 months ago 6 minutes read 0 comments
A group of professionals at a cryptocurrency conference discussing blockchain data and crypto tokens in a modern setting.

The main change in the SEC and CFTC’s March 2026 interpretation is not a blanket answer on whether crypto is legal or illegal. It is a lifecycle test: a token can begin in securities territory and later move out of it once buyers no longer reasonably expect profits from an issuer’s managerial efforts, which is a meaningful break from the idea that tokens remain stuck in securities status forever.

Lifecycle treatment replaces permanent “securities limbo”

The joint SEC-CFTC interpretation draws a sharper line between early-stage fundraising and later-stage network use. Under the SEC’s reading, a crypto asset is not automatically a security in all contexts, and even a token initially sold as part of an investment contract can cease to be one if the factual basis for investor reliance changes over time.

That matters because the old market shorthand was too blunt in both directions. “All tokens are securities” was wrong, but so was the assumption that labeling a token as utility ended the inquiry; the March 2026 framework centers the actual source of expected profits, especially whether buyers still depend on a promoter or issuer to create value.

Where the agencies drew the operational lines

The SEC also used the interpretation to answer several recurring crypto-specific questions that had been treated as open-ended risk. Protocol staking and mining rewards tied to validating transactions or securing a proof-of-stake network are treated as payments for services, not as securities profits, when they reflect administrative or ministerial activity rather than passive claims on an issuer’s business.

Wrapped tokens received similarly conditional treatment. A wrapped token that merely represents a non-security asset does not become a security just because it is wrapped, while a wrapped version of a digital security keeps the underlying asset’s securities character; the rule is classification by substance, not packaging.

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Airdrops of non-security tokens without consideration also fall outside securities registration under the interpretation. That does not eliminate analysis around later secondary trading or token design, but it narrows one area where projects and platforms had been treating all distributions as if they carried the same securities risk.

Tokenized securities now have a more usable map

A separate SEC staff statement from January 2026 helps explain where tokenization fits into this framework. It distinguishes issuer-sponsored tokenized securities from third-party sponsored versions, with the latter split between custodial tokens and synthetic tokenized exposures, including instruments that function like security-based swaps in crypto form.

The practical point is that tokenization does not wash away the underlying instrument. If the economics track an issuer security, or if a third-party structure recreates that exposure synthetically, the SEC looks through the technical wrapper and regulates based on economic reality, which matters for venue registration, disclosure, custody, and product design.

Activity or asset type Regulatory treatment in the 2026 framework What decides the outcome
Token initially sold in a fundraising phase Can be a security at first, but not necessarily forever Whether buyers still rely on issuer efforts for profits
Protocol staking or mining rewards Generally treated as service payments, not securities returns Whether rewards come from network security work rather than issuer profit promises
Wrapped non-security token Not a security solely because it is wrapped Classification of the underlying asset
Wrapped digital security Remains a security Underlying security status carries through the wrapper
Issuer-sponsored or synthetic tokenized security Falls under securities rules Economic substance, not product label

Signal for exchanges and issuers: disclosure and venue risk, not just labels

The SEC’s 2025 disclosure guidance remains important because the new interpretation did not replace issuer obligations; it made them more targeted. Crypto securities offerings still require narrative disclosure on business models, risk factors, management, and financial statements, and the guidance specifically calls for smart contract code and network or application code to be filed as exhibits, which is unusual by traditional securities standards but directly relevant here.

For issuers, that means token design alone will not solve compliance questions if the sale mechanics and economic incentives still look like capital formation around promoter-led value creation. For exchanges and brokers, the consequence is more operational: if listed assets fall on the securities side of the line, venue registration questions become immediate, including whether a platform needs to operate as a securities broker or alternative trading system rather than assuming commodity-style treatment.

The CFTC’s role is the balancing side of this framework. By administering the Commodity Exchange Act consistently with the SEC’s interpretation and recognizing many non-security crypto assets as commodities, the agencies are reducing the old jurisdictional gap where market participants faced uncertainty not only over whether a token was regulated, but by whom.

The next checkpoint is Congress, but some gray areas remain now

This interpretation arrives before Congress finishes broader market structure legislation, so it should be read as a working framework rather than the final architecture. The next practical checkpoint is whether pending legislation codifies the SEC-CFTC split, adjusts the lifecycle test, or changes how exchanges register and separate securities listings from commodity spot markets.

One area that still needs careful analysis is governance tokens, especially when governance rights influence protocol revenue, treasury deployment, or mechanisms tied to price support. The SEC’s core test remains reasonable expectation of profit from others’ efforts, and tokens that look operational on the surface can still move back toward securities analysis if their economics create a clear investment thesis around a managing group.

Short Q&A

Does this mean most crypto assets are now officially not securities?
Not automatically. The framework says many non-security tokens can be treated as commodities, but classification still depends on facts, timing, and how buyer expectations are formed.

Can a token really stop being a security later?
Yes, under the SEC’s March 2026 interpretation, if investors no longer reasonably expect profits from issuer or promoter efforts, the token can exit that classification.

What is the immediate compliance trigger for platforms?
Listing analysis becomes more important. If a platform offers tokens that remain securities under this framework, securities-market registration obligations may follow.

What should market participants watch next?
Congressional market structure legislation and exchange implementation. Those two steps will show whether the interpretation becomes a stable operating framework or a transition stage before stricter registration rules.

Related Coverage
SEC clarifies how federal securities laws apply to crypto assets: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission – “The Defiant
CFTC Joins SEC to Clarify the Application of Federal Securities Laws to Crypto Assets | CFTC

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